Instead, Harrison is working out at a New Jersey high school not far from MetLife Stadium, getting ready for his first training camp with the Giants, which starts on July 28.

“I’ll do that when I’m done with football,” Harrison, who was married in Orlando but flew back north afterwards, told NJ.com. “Next offseason, we’ll go on a honeymoon. She understands that and respects that; that’s why I love my wife.”

Harrison went undrafted in 2012, which was no great surprise, considering he played at William Penn University, which is located in Oskaloosa, Iowa, and faces opponents such as Central Methodist, Evangel, Peru State and MidAmerican Nazarene.

As an underdog and oversized defensive tackle, Harrison made the Jets roster, became a starter after his rookie year, picked up the nickname “Snacks’’ and developed into such a formidable run-stopper that when he hit free agency, the Giants signed him to a five-year, $46.25 million mega-deal.

“I went down there and surprised her,’’ Harrison said. “It was a house she wanted for a while and it was unexpected, so she cried and my fiancée cried as well, so everybody was emotional in the house.’’

The money, Harrison insists, will not change who he is, because he will not forget how he got here.

“The contract is nice and everything, man, but money doesn’t motivate me,’’ Harrison said in the spring. “I am not the guy who once they get the money, sits back, relax and think they made it. No, I am still scared that they will take my playbook if I don’t do right. That is a feeling that will never leave me, and that is the honest truth, that isn’t something I’m just saying to sound good. I love the game of football. I want to be successful, so I will have the free-agent mentality until I retire.’’